452
STEPHENSON’S PATENT
piston rod, and attached at the outer end to the plunger of the pump. One of the
pumps is shewn in section in fig. 29, to three times the scale of the engraving, or 2j
inches to a foot. The barrel of the pump, A A, is made of cast-iron, 1J inches in
Fig. 29.
Fig. 30. Fig. 31.
diameter inside, and three-eighths of an inch thick. B B, is the plunger, If inches in
diameter, and made of a wrought iron tube for the sake of lightness, plugged up at the
inner end, and having a short rod keyed into the other end, which is fixed into the
socket in the driving arm by a nut screwed on the end. The plunger B, passes
through a stuffing box, C, at the end of the pump barrel A, with a brass gland, D,
attached by screws, E E, to the flanch of the stuffing box. The plunger is turned
truly cylindrical, to move water-tight through the stuffing box, but the inside of the
barrel of the pump is not bored, as the plunger does not touch it.
A plug, E„ is screwed into the other end of the pump to afford a passage quite
through for the convenience of fixing. Two short pipes, G G, are cast upon the end
of the barrel A, to the lower one of which is bolted the tube L, having the piece
I fixed below it; both are of brass, and the piece I has a short tube cast on its side,
with a screw made upon its outer end. H is the copper suction pipe, having a brass